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Madeleine

 
Movies:

Madeleine

  • Director: David Lean
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Courtroom Drama, Docudrama
  • Themes: Love Triangles, Murder Investigations, Femmes Fatales
  • Main Cast: Ann Todd, Norman Wooland, Ivan Desny, Leslie Banks, Barbara Everest
  • Release Year: 1950
  • Country: UK
  • Run Time: 114 minutes

Plot

David Lean's Madeleine was inspired by a true story that rocked the English legal system to its foundations in the mid-19th century. Told in flashback, the film explains why aristocratic young Scotswoman Madeleine Smith (Ann Todd, then the wife of director Lean) is on trial for murder. The audience is apprised of Madeleine's illicit romance with deceptively charming Frenchman Emile L'Angelier (Ivan Desny), her futile attempts to break off the relationship, her "proper" betrothal to Englishman William Minnoch (Norman Wooland), and the murder by poison of the now-inconvenient L'Angelier. The jury's verdict was as controversial in 1950 as it had been a century earlier. David Lean and scenarists Stanley Haynes and Nicholas Phipps refuse to take sides, permitting the viewers to draw their own conclusions about the notorious Madeleine. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Cast

Susan Stranks - Janet Smith; Patricia Raine - Bessie Smith; Elizabeth Sellars - Christina; Edward Chapman - Dr. Thompson; Jean Cadell - Mrs. Jenkins; Eugene Deckers - Thuau; Ivor Barnard - Mr. Murdoch; Henry Edwards - Clerk of the Court; Barry Jones - Prosecuting Counsel; Andre Morell - Defending Counsel; Eva Bartok; Irene Browne - Miss Grant; Moyra Fraser - Dancer; Cameron Hall - Dr. Yeoman; John Laurie - Scots Divine; James McKechnie - Commentator; Kynaston Reeves - Dr. Penny; Amy Veness - Miss Aiken; Anthony Newley; Douglas Barr - William, the Boot Boy

Credit

Margaret Furse - Costume Designer, George Pollock - First Assistant Director, David Lean - Director, Geoffrey Foot - Editor, William Alwyn - Composer (Music Score), Muir Mathieson - Musical Direction/Supervision, Guy Green - Cinematographer, Norman Spencer - Production Manager, Stanley Haynes - Producer, John Bryan - Set Designer, Stanley Haynes - Screenwriter, Nicholas Phipps - Screenwriter

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Wikipedia: Madeleine (film)
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Madeleine
Directed by David Lean
Produced by Stanley Haynes
Written by Stanley Haynes
Nicholas Phipps
Starring Ann Todd
Ivan Desny
Norman Wooland
Music by William Alwyn
Cinematography Guy Green
Distributed by February 14, 1950
Running time 114 min.
Country  United Kingdom
Language English

Madeleine is a 1950 film directed by David Lean, based on a true story about Madeleine Smith, a young Glasgow woman from a wealthy family who was tried in 1857 for the murder of her lover, Emile L'Angelier. The trial was much publicized in the newspapers of the day and was labelled "the trial of the century." Lean's adaptation of the story stars his then wife, Ann Todd with Ivan Desny as her French lover. Norman Wooland played the respectable suitor, and Leslie Banks the authoritarian father, who are both unaware of Madeleine's secret life.

Lean made the film primarily as a "wedding present" to then-wife Ann Todd, who had previously played the role on-stage. He was never satisfied with the film and cited it as his least-favourite feature-length movie.

Plot

The film dramatises events leading up to the 1857 trial of an otherwise respectable young woman, Madeleine Smith, (Ann Todd), for the murder of her draper's assistant lover, Emile L'Angelier (Ivan Desny). The trial produced the uniquely Scottish verdict of "not proven", which left Madeleine a free woman.

The film begins with the purchase of a house in Glasgow by a wealthy middle class Victorian family. Their eldest daughter, Madeleine, chooses to have for her own the bedroom in the basement. Here she will have easy access to the servants' entrance, and will be able to entertain her lover, Frenchman Emile L'Angelier, without the knowledge of her family.

The relationship continues, and the couple become secretly engaged, but L'Angelier begins to press Madeleine to reveal his existence to her father in order that they can marry. Madeleine, frightened of her authoritarian father, is reluctant to do so and eventually visits L'Angelier in his rooms and says she will run away with him and marry him rather than face telling her father the truth. L'Angelier, however, says that he could never marry her in this way, and Madeleine realises that he does not love her for herself but rather that he sees her as a means to recover his position in society. She tells him that their relationship is at an end and asks him to send her letters back.

During the time that she has been seeing L'Angelier, Madeleine's father has been encouraging her to accept the attentions of a wealthy society gentleman, William Minnoch, (Norman Wooland) and after having broken her engagement with L'Angelier, she tells Mr Minnoch that she will accept his marriage proposal. Her family are delighted, but L'Angelier visits the house again and threatens to show her father the compromising letters in his possession unless she continues to see him. Saying nothing of her new engagement, Madeleine reluctantly agrees.

Some weeks after this, L'Angelier is taken very ill, and although he recovers, he later has another attack of the same illness and this time dies from it.

He is found to have died from arsenic poisoning, and L'Angelier's friend points the finger of suspicion at Madeleine, who is found to have had arsenic in her possession at the time of L'Angelier's death.

The remainder of the film covers the court case, at the end of which the jury bring the verdict of not proven, a uniquely Scottish verdict which releases Madeleine from custody as neither guilty nor not guilty.

Cast

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Copyrights:

Movies. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Madeleine (film)" Read more